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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-03-20, Page 6ROYAL PURPLE stock& PoultrySpecifics FREEWe win send absolutely free, for .„,the asking, postpaid; one of our large 64 -page boas (with in- sert), on the' common diseases of stock and poultry. Tells how to feed ell kinds of heavy and light horses, colts and mares, milch cows, calves and fattening skeers, sago how to keep and feed poultry so that they will lay SS well in winter as in summer. It cantaina 560 • recommends from all over Canada, from people who have user' our goods. No farmer should be ;without it. You can fatten cattle and hogs in,a month's less tirae by using oar Royal Purple Stock Specific than you could possibly do without it, thereby saving a month's feed and labor and the cost to you will not be more than $1.50 for ein Pigs or aim for one ether. 56 will .1ceeD Your horses in show condition with ordinary feed. If you have a poor, miserable -look- ing animal on your place try it on this one first and see the marvellous result which will be obtained. Our Stock Specific will increase the milk flow three to live lbs. per cow Per daY, while being fed in the stable. A 500 package will last a cow or horse 70 days. I ROYAL PTJRPLE POULTRY SPECIFIC will make your hens lay just as well in the winter as in the summer, and will keep them free from disease. These goods are pure and unadulterated. We do not use any cheap filler to make a large package, entirely different from any on the mar` -et at the present time. Royal Purple Stock Specific, 500 pclurs.•, four 50c pckgs., in an air -tight tin, for 01.50. i Royal Purple Poultry Specific, 25c and 500 pckgs.. and $1.50 air -tight tins that hold four 50c pckgs. Royal Purple Lice Killer, 25c and 50c COS 30c by Royal Purple Gall Cure, 25c and 506 tins; 30c by mail. Royal Purple Sweat Liniment, 50c bottle.; 60e by znail. Royal Purple Cough Cure, 50c tin; 60e by mail. Royal Purple Disinfectant, 25c and 50c tins: Royal Purple Roup Cure, 25c tins ; 30c by xaail. Royal Purple Worm Powder, 25c tins; 306 by mail. Manufactured only by TheW.A.JenldnsMfg.Co. London, Canada Royal Purple Supplies and Booklets may be had from Ford & McLeod, Flour and Feed: W.S.R. Holmes, Drugs CLINTON •CleIgTON N'EW EU RURAL CARRIERS • Instructions Have Been Issued for Their OuiClanoe. hook of regulations for the courtiers engaged in the 'renal malI work has been issued by the poet- offi c e doper tin en t, trom wine is the follbwieg ' paragraphs, which may prove of yalUe to the patrons of this part o the Service, are repro - dined Ruya1 cou.riers are.:au - 'termed and required while „serving their ratites to take applications • and' accept Money for Money orders and postal notes from persons desiring to pim- 'chase same; and to give receipts for funds so received. Each courier 'will be furnished With a small supply of Wank ap- plications for the use of intending remitters. In all cases where applications for money orders or postal notes are made :through rural couriers, such .-: orders-br notes shall be pro- cured at the distributing c'post- office to which the Couriers are at- . tached, and not at any other post - office on the courier's route with- out special authorizations from the department. Unless special instructions to the contrary shall have been issued by the (department, the rural couriers shall iimmediately, after returning to the distributing office from their trips, present the applications they have received, and the money, in- cluding fees, for money orders and postal notes, to the postmaster, who wilbissue the orders and notes according to::ethe applications, and mail to the respective remitters, in official envelopers, the receipts which are detached from the postal notes or from the tidvices of the money orders. A money brder or postal note is- sued on an application presented through rural courier shall be per- sonally delivered On the route to the applicant or his duly authoriz- ed representative when the courier makes his' next regular trip, het courier should not leave his route for this purpose. If personal de- livery is found impracticable, the (Seder or note may be enclosed in an envelope addressed to the appli- cant and deposited in applicant's (the remitter s) mail box. Ifon the other hand, the re- mitter so desires, the Courier may, as the agent of the remitter and at his request, mail the money order or postal note to the payee thereof iD an addressed envelope furnished for the purpose by the remitter (the purchaser% any extra fee or remuneration for performing such service, NEARLY ASP',. fe-X I ATED. --- Four Persons In Toronto Almost Lose • Their Lives. . TORONTO. Sarsh 17.-C,ve1c0me by gas fumeswhiI making arrangements .for the remeval of a patient to the hospital, three women and a man were found in an uneenseions, condi-. tion at 9e01-2 West Moor :.troet Sat- urday night by the driver of the am- bulance for which they had previously O roned. Mrs. ;lames Meredith, aged • GO years, 744 Euelid aVenue, 10 in a. very serious conditien; Mrs: H. S. Meredith, aged 28, 9S9 1-2 West Bloor street, is also critically ill, while Mrs. Moore, a nurse from Muskoka, still remains in a • stupor despite the ef- forts of the Physicians to revive her. George H. Pedlar Dead. OSHAWA, March 17. -George 1-1. Pedlar, aged 70, died suddenly early yesterday morning at his home in Oshawa from heart failure. He was president and manager of ties Pedlar People, Limited, manufacturers of .metal goods and culverts, with head office and factory at Oshawa. Mr. Pedlar will be greatly missed in the community, where he was well- known, having been born and lived all his life here. • . Found Body In Canal. ST. CATFIARINES, March 17. -That the bedy of the man found in the old Welland Canal Saturday afternoon was. that of C. W. Ruth of 'Parson's Pleasure Place, Oxford, England, is believed from papers found in the drowned man's pocket. It was buried Saturday night, an inquest not being considered necessary. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , . , a • SPRING • 3 0 • • • • T E R. NI. 1 • • 0 from Mar. 25th following Easter. • • • merges into our Summer Terme • n all Departments * of "Shaw's 6 :Schools" Toronto - Centrals! • Business College with four city§ • branch schools- The Centrale 0 Telegraph and Railroad• o • • School, and Shaw's Civil Ser -e • vice School. Free catalogue• • explains courses , fend ad -e• *van ages. invite you to 44 t We • ivrite for it. W. 11. Shaiv, Presi-• • *dent, Head Offices, Young 8:.! :Gerrard Sts., Toronto. • ess••••••••••••••••••••••• Ilemiquariers FOR Welkin? and Riling Olfieer plows 1. H. C. Gasoline Engines McCormick Machinery Pumps and Windmills. ALL KINDS OF REPAIRS AND EXPERTIN G. CALL ON Miller it Lillie Corner of Princes and Albert streets. CentralltusinessCollegc Stratford, Ont. The Best Practical Training School in Ontario Three Departments COIVI1VIERCI1.L SHORTHAND TELEGRAPHY. All courses are thorough and practicagl. Teachers are ex- perienced and graduates are placed in positions. We give • individual attention, and stu- duente may enter at any time Write for free catalogue at • once. D. A. McLachlan, Princilea SUFFERED FROM Catarrh of the Stomach For Thirty Years. y`tiC PIY.PA1 NIL 71%4ES are' best for nursing Mothers because they, do , not affect the rest of the system. Miidbutsure. 256, a box at your druggist's. as,florial. CMS ANO OFIENOOAL 00. OF CANADA, LIMFFED. 163 Gold Found In India. • LONDON, March l0 -The London Deily Chronicle's Bombay COrrPsPon.- dent sa y0 a rOmantic discovery of mineral wealth un a vast scale is .re- purted from an area covering 1900, square miles in the Dalbhum district, about. 150 miles trout Caleutte. Eetonsive deposits of gold, copper, coal, iron, asbustes, mica and malign - nese are reported to Lu Meated ori the estate of the late Prince Moharnet Bektear Shah, who cliOd 66 Minith ago. MACKENZIE KING CHOSEN. North York Liberals Unanimously Nominate Him. NEWMARKET, March I0. -Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, Minister of Labor in the last Government, accept- ed the nomination unanimously ten- dered him by the North York Lib- erals Saturday aftereoon. The meeting opened with ex -Mayor TJrorthart cif Toronto. Sir A ion evles- Catarrh of the Stomach is generally caused from some interference with the action of the liver, and is a malady that affects the whole body. Some symptoms are burning pain in :he stomach, constant vomiting, abnor- mal thirst, incessant reaching, etc. On the first signs of any of these symptoms Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills should be taken. They are a specific for all dis- orders arising from wrong action of the liver. Mr. Michael Miller, Ellerslie, Alta., writes: -"I take pleasure in writing you concerning the great value I have received by using Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills, for catarrh of the stomach, with which 1 have been a sufferer for thirty years. I. used four vials and . they completely cured me." . , Price, 25 cents a vial, 5 vials f&.$1.:00, at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co'., Limited, Toronto, Ont. SENT LETTER TO JUDGE. London Crank Threatened County Judge Talbot McBeth. LONDON, Ont„ March 10. -County Judge Talbot Mclieth, who has heard the argument in the appeal from the decision of the electors ‘vho voted on ,]an. 1 in -favor of local option, has received a threatening letter, Lipper, ently from sotne crank. 'file epistle is, unsigned and appears to have been posted someethere in the city of Lon- dOn. No decision has as yet been given and as yet no effort 01161 111111 made to locate the person 11 110 altr,n1 plod to 11). 111111110 the jurist. '.I111 olten, is very badly written, arid certain ieettuns uf t arts nut readily le:der:et:0d. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Adrianople Bombarded. CONSTANTINOPLE, March 10. - An official communication last night says that the allies bombarded Adria- nople on Thursday and Friday, the Turkish forts replying. Saturday was quiet: On Thursday at Bulair, the Turkish artillery effectively attacked a batta- lion of the enemy which was advanc- ing, inflicting considerable losses. The following day the enemy fired on the Turkish cruiser Torgat Reis, which replied and silenced their batteries. DURHAM IS FLOODED Saugeen River Overflows and Causes Serious Damage. worm, I1100. 136 aCnenzle King, '.r. 0. Robinette and a number or the proM- inent Liberals of the riding on the platform. Dr. Michael Clark, M.P., 10 Red Deer, arrived later from Ottawa. The hall nem so packed that even the doorways were crowded an0 space at the rear of the plat-foe:II was utiliz- ed for part of the audience. As a compliment to T. C. Robinette, K.C., his name was put forward first, but he withdraw in behalf of the for- mer Minister of Labor. Hon. Mackenzie King was nominat- ed by R. B. Davis and Jas. Cooper. The chairman then asked for the unanimous nomination of Hon. Mr. King. This was given by a standing vote of all present, followed by cheers. To Probe Griffin's •Death. BRANTFORD, March 10. -An •in- quest has been called here to investi- gate the circumstances surrounding the death of Bert Griffin, local factory emPloye, who was found dead in the Bodega, tavern at closing hour Friday night. Griffin, an Englishman, had been armend the hotel that night and had been refused a drink. He came here from Woodstock. OTHER PLACES _SUFFERING curmyine Streets Are Inundated by lee Jam on the Grand ,River and Both Brantford and Galt Are Without Their Gas Supply - Belleville City Hall Is Struck Lightning -Gale Hits Oswego. DURHAM, Ont, March 17. -For the past two days the worst spring flood. in twenty years has had this place in its grip and apparently the end is not yet. Saturday morning the ice jam- med above McGowan's flour mill and turned about half the swollen Saugeen down through the town, where it has done niuch damage to cellars and oth- er property. About forty houses are .affected and many families forced to leave, some ef them being taken out through windows. Just after leaving the main river the overflow passed under the CP.R. bridge and already has one of the abutments undermined so that it is not likely any trains will be able to go over till the river goes down and repairs can be made. This will shut the Walkerton branch off from communication with Toronto. Dunnville Streets Flooded. DITNNVILLE, March 17. -The worst flood in the history of Dunnville for at least fifty years started here on Sat- urday afternoon and continued all day Sunday. The ice jammed behind the long bridge and embankment over the Grand River at this point, backing up the water with very little warning, soon it made a serious break in the embankment along the west end of Dunnville and a stream of water pour- ed over Maine, Lock and Broad streets, filling cellars and doing other damage that will reach many thousands of dollars. At midnight dynamite was used to open the embankment in the other side of the river, but this did not seem to have the desired effect. Gas Main Broken. BRANTFORD, March 17. -Hund -reds of people suffered from cold here yes- terday, as a result of the high water of the Grand River, washing away the big gas main which is the main supply to this city. The break occur- red in exactly the seine place as it did duripg the freshet last year. People yesterday Lad to resort to all kinds of makeshift n easures to keep warm. In ease of sieltness, acute suf- fering is reported. • BRIEFS FROM THE WiRES. Robert Reford, president of the Rob- ert Reford, Shipping Co., Ltd., and one of Montreal's most prominent citizens, died on Saturday in his 82nd Aar. Under the auspices 'of the Ontario branch of the Dominion Alliance a temperance' field day was held yester- day throughout Leeds and Grenville. A new 'steel car ferry, which is to run at the letackinack Straits, passed up the St. Clair river Saturday, after a trip through the heavy ice of Lake Si. Clair from Detroit. W. R. Clarke, the Kansas promoter who floated the Alberta Great Water- ways Railway, has issued a writ claim- ing $50,000 for alleged libel against The Edmonton Bulletin. The body of an unknown man, sup- posedly a tramp, was pickece up by the crew of a westbound freight about three miles west of Bothwell yesterday and taken to Thamesville. ' It has been definitely decided to hold an old home week and summer carnival in Guelph in the corning sum- mer, and the dates as fixed at a public meeting held yesterday, were July 28 to August 2, Two. New York patients =Ong the first to be treated with the turtle serunt of Dr. Friedmann were report- ed yesterday by physicians who have them under observation to show much improvement. Ottawa Irielarnen honored the mem- ory of their patron saint by a ban- quet in the new Russell Hotel Satur- day night and by a ,parade through .the city's stregts Sunday, about 2,000 being in line. The Federal commander of the mili- tary zone arMonterey, Mexico, receiv- ed a report yesterday that Gen. Trucy Aubert had routed the Carranza forces at Monclova and was in pursuit of the .rebels, who were retreating toward ustim ente. Three of Crew List. HALIFAX, NS., March 10. -Three of the crew of six of the Nova Scotia sehooner A. V. Conrad were lost over- board in a heavy sea before daylight on Friday 'morning last. The vessel was bound from Turk's Island with salt for Lahave, where she •arrived yesterday fifternoon. The three unfor- tunate men at the time were repairing the pumps. Tvo lines May all t.:::,5Otte0.01,.( Flirt EX.MlNISTER BUR I,ED. Owners of City of Detroit Recon- sider Intention to Withdraw. Goderieb is likely to have steamei of two lines calling, here again this sea son, Tue city of Detroit, it was an- nounced, world be withdrawn ell a0 - COMA of poor husIneis last season, hit Mr, Obarlet 0. Lee and Mr Lionel G. Parsons, of the Board of Trade, have returned from a trip to Detroit with the assuriroce of I the steamship people that the boat will cover the route 1 - .gain -on certain conditions. A tug is to he thrnished• free of char- ge fot tow ing thesteamer in the har- bour; dockilge is to he free and the town to do some advertising for the mutual benefit si,f the. enmpany and municipality. The deputation was less SUCC0500IO in negotiations with tee Northern Navigation Company at Sarnia, Which •laeld out no prospect of having a ves- sel call here this coming summer. Galt In Darkness. GAIT, March 17. -Three-fourths of the population of Galt sat in darkness last night. Saturday about noon the natural gas supply suddenly ceased. Kitchen ranges went cold, furnaces, domestic, and in the workshops were put out of commission as night fell, that large part of the community de- pendent on the illusive vapor for light in stores, public buildings, industrial plants and dwellings fully realized the disabilities, discomforts and losses at- tending gas closure. News came that the break in the service was due to a break in the trunk main at Brant - fords and that chances were against resumption for three or four days. City Hall Is Struck. Cabinet Members Attend Hon. John 1-i aggart's Funeral. PERTH, Ont., March 17. ---An im- pressive military 'funeral was accord- ed Saturday afternoon to the remains of the late Hon. J. Graham Haggart, ex -Minister of Railways and Canals, and for 42 years representative of South Lanark in the Federal House of Parliament, 'whose death occurred at Ottawa on Thursday last. The 42nd Regiment, -with which deceased ser, service as captem, conducted the cortege. . Several Ministers of the crown and members of both sides of the House were in attendance and included Hon. I. D. Reid, John Stanfield, M.P., chief Conservative • ,whip; Mr. Speaker Sproule, Senator Ede eras and others. Children Cry FOR FI.ETCIIER'S CASTORIA Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO RIA FROZEN TO DEATH. Family of Six Settlers Perish In Dakota Blizzard. RAPID CITY, S. D., March 17. - Overwhelmed by a blizzsed on the open prairie, 16miles from here, A. F. Perry, his Wife, three daughters and a son, who were trekking from the Black Hills, were found frozen to death Friday morning, according, to word just received here. Another son may have perished, while a third, dazed, isms found riding aimlessly in search of the others. With their household belongings in a prairie schooner and the two older sons driving their 26 cattle ahead, they left here, despite repeated warnings, Out on the prairie the full force of the storm struck them. Perry blind- folding his balking horses with gunny sacks, but in vain, and finally set them loose. They reached the Milton Frazer raneh. Too frozen to climb back, he died beside the wagon. Mrs. Perry's body was found with her infant son elasped to her breast in a last attempt to appease hisshun- ger. The three other ehilden were huddled about her. Her skirts and underelething Were bound about them. Two mon who started to search for the Pcrrys are miseing, and no word has been received fmtn the brother. BELLEVILLE, March I7. -A severe thunderstorm passed over this city on Saturday evening, during which the tower of the City Hall was struck. One of the large dials of the clock was blown out, bricks and ornamentations knocked out, and the tower otherwise damaged. A bolt also entered The In- telligene.er printing office, but did no damage. The heavy peal of thunder following caused four runaways on Front street. Many phones and elec- trical motors r ere put out of commis- sion by the shock. • Oswego Storm Swept. OSWEGO', N.Y., March 17.-A windstorm of cyclonic velocity, accom- panied by lightning, thunder and rain, swept over Oswego and vicinity yesterday, leaving death .and damage in its wake. An ice house at the New York Central Railroad shops collape- ed and Earl Davis, a carpenter, of Lacona, N.Y., was killed. Three men were seriously injured. The storm lasted hardly more than a half hour. The wind blew 30 to 90 miles an hour, and the temperature dropped 25 degrees in 20 minutes. ROBBERS GOT $250,000. New York Burglars Tunnelled Into Wealthy Pawnbrokers. NEW YORK, March 17. -An east side burglary, perpetrated by clever eracksmen some time yesterday, net- ted the thieves the largest haul of booty obtained in New York in many years. Martin Sirnons & Sons, pawn- brokers at 94 Hester street, were the victims and the property, stolen in- cludes $250,000 worth of jewelry, dia. mends and other precious stones and $100,000 of negotiable securities. The thieves gained access to the pawnbrokers richly stored vaults by TRAGEDIES AT FALLS. Accidental Death and Suicide Report- ed at Niagara. NIAGARA FALLS, Ont., March 17., -Miss Josephine Kigititch of 53 Titus street, Buffalo, slipped into the river from Luna Island and was carried over the American falls at 5.30 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The accident was witnessed by Mr. Wogsick Maciejouski and Miss Mary Maciejouski of Buffalo. So far as the reservation authorities co-uld learn no one else saw the un- fortunate woman go over tbe falls. Another mystery was solved when Joseph Viysaski, a bartender, living at 1,328 East Falls street, yesterday afternoon identified the woman's hat found on the river batik about 150 feet abeve, the Boat island bridge on Saturday, as his wife's and declared his belief that the wOrnan had ended her life by going Mier the American falls. He told the police that he and his wife had had trouble, and the autirdrities say that he accused the woman of being unfaithful to him. Well -Known Engineer Dead. MONCTON, N.I3., March 17. -Peter S. Archibald, the well-known civil en- gineer and fernier chief engineer of the ,Intercolonial Railway, died yes- terday afternoon after a brief illness. He •joined Sir Sanford Fleming's In- tercolonial construction staff ill 1E176 and was aseietant and resident .erigi- neer elude): him during its construc- tion. Ile was chief engineer of the Intercelanial from 1879 until 1898, when he retired to private life as a coesultine engincer. 'The late ' Mr. Archibald' was' 35 years of age. . •What 4oTake, This Year apv,e4s, ftwayea 'eza/ ZpowconZefigze ..foyeet.letad3 Greillu41.6ae DY -O -LA OK Mew* KINDSoreees Ire the CLEANEST, SiMpLEST, and BEST HOME DYE, one eon buy -Why you don't even have to know what KIND of Cloth your Goods are made blIstakes are Impossible. • Send for Free Color Card. Story Booklet, and Booklet giving results of Dyeing over other colors, OThe JOHNSON4OCHARD5ON CO., Limited, Montreal. Canada. Take a trip now and then, and try to see something , outside of the place you live in. Travel is one of the best educators. Take pains to do your work well. The conscienious worker is the one who gets to the front -(the one who is never idle, teNeffe:IXil ' . . i11111,1/11111,.111111 11,1.11.1 tee, 018 AVegei:ible'Preparationlbi As- similating &good andReg itta- ling. thr. 3 Maths and.Dinvels of ' ..1eLiteia Promote s-Diestion,Cliec 1:ful- ness antiRest.Gofltai ns neither Opiunalorphine nor lariere.l. NOT 10;,,kiaiiic 0 re Old .7.1,Tififien.: l!.1E2f..471 Iim;pkin Seed - Abc.J'arsir • Sal& - Adze. &eft • IlTpernitr,t /33 6ar330er,7.8414, • 11570 (krn)Oa For Infants and Children, The MEd You Have • Al aye Bought Bears the Signature of fee A perfect Remedy forConstipn- tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms,Convulsions,Ieverish- [less and Loss or SLEEP. EacSimile Signature of NEW 'YORK. Use For Over Thirty Years 60 EXACT COPY OF WRAPPEa. 1 THE CENTAUR 00 06000. MTN YORK CITY. means of a tunnel from an aouvring building on a neighboring street. They made a clean getaway with their valu- able loot. The police are of the opinion that six cracksmen were employed on the job and that the tunnelling required all of Saturday eight, and the greater part of Sunday morning. It is their belief that the actual robbery took place yesterday afternoon while h00 - sheds of persons wero passing along the street in front of the pawnshoo. NEW MILITANT LEAGUE. A Spiritual Movement Is Formed by English Suffragettes. LONDON, IVIarch 17. -"We have Mended ourselves together with the aim of concentrating attention on the spiritual and vital ssues involved in the women's movement." This is the opening statement in a manifesto issued by a new suffrage organization, entitled "The Spiritual Militancy League for Women's Char- acter, Rights and Liberties," of which the most prominent members are Lady A,berdonway, Mrs. Despard, sister of Gen. Sir John French and Mrs. Flora Annie Steal, the novelist. The symbol of the league is an orange scarf on a black dress. Bands of spiritual militanto clad in black and orange, attended the services at St. Paul's and other churches yes- terday. The league has sent a letter to clergymen, urging them to abandon their attitude of silence and neutrality. SAVED OLD WOMAN. Plucky Man Caeried Her Out of Her Burning Dwelling. TORONTO, March 17. -Unable to assist herself, Mrs. Kathleen Derry, aged 60 years, narrowly escaped, death by suffocation when her house at 578 West Wellington street, heard the wo- man's cries for assistance. Springing through the fire he gathered her in his arms and, running through the flames, reached the street. Mrs. Derry has been an invalid for some time, and had it not been or the prompt work of Jones she un• doubtedly would have lost her life. The fire caused damage to the extent of 51.000 tn the on' Starting Service on Hudson. NEW YORK, Xlarch 17. -Navigation of the Hudson River 1.),5, passenger steamboats will bo resumed Monday night owing to the mildness of the weather this v. -int or. Nitireh 17 is art urnisually early dete ter vessels of this type to ply the Theisen waters. The People's line te 11,16' 13' and the Citi. Zen's line to Try aro the cempaniese pplaasisieniiiigiger tsnerliAtt,aen.eutele the season's Unveiled Statue To Livingstone. BLANTYRE, Scotland , march 17. - The centenary of the birth :0 Dr. David Livingstone, the African ex- plorer and missionary, ly S celebrated by the people of 01111 birthplace yes- terday. Despite the Willie snow, A crOwd gathere(l in the kirkyard of the Memorial Churein where Mrs. Livingstone -Wilson, 1 he sole surviving child of the great explorer, unveiled his statue. Electric Restorer for Men restoresii nproper 'teen's% In erhees body 60 Premature edecay and all sexual weakness averted at once. rhospbonal will make you a new man. Price $8a boxor two for $5. Mailed to any address. The heohell Drug 44o.. titMatharinee. Ont. Not Optimistic. SOFIA, March 17. -Premier Gues- hofee statement in the Sobranie Fri- day, that despite the incidents at Nierita and elsewhere, the allies com- posing the Balkan league, were firmly united, was the subject of an extend- ed debate in the House Saturday. The Opposition leaders declined to share the Premier's optimism regarding the final results of the Balkan union. Two Perished 'In Fire. NIAGARA VALLS,, LY., March 17. -Two men were killed and about $15,- 000 damage done when the:Hotel Suth- erland at Wilson, a village eighteen miles northeast of :here, was totally destroyed by fire, early yesterday. The fere was of unknown origin. The dead are believed to be: James Langton, 70 years old, of Lockport; Daniel Burns, 61 years old, hostler at the hotel. ABROAD statement -Yet literally true. The aim of man from the beginning has been to make his building materials as nearly like nat- ural stone as possible. The great labor required to quarry stone led him to seek various manufactured substitutes. The only reason he ever used wood was that it was easiest to get and most convenient to use. Wood is no longer easy to get. Like most building material, its cost is in- creasing at an alarming rate. The cost of concrete is decreasing. So, from the standpoint of either ser- vice or economy, Concrete is the best building material. Canada's farmers are using more concrete, in proportion to their numbers, than the farmers of any other country. Why? Because they are being supplied with Canada Cement O cement of the highest possible quality, which in- sures the success of their concrete work. The secret of concrete's popularity in Canada lies in the fact that while we have been advertising the 1.19C of concrete, we have also been producing, by scien- tific methods, a cement so uniformly high in quality that the concrete made with it gives the complete satisfaction our advertisements promieed. Concrete would not have been in such urtiversal use today, had an iracrior grade of cement been supplied. Insist upon getting Canada Cement. It ie your best • assurance of thoroughly satisfactory results from i. your concrete work. There is a Canada Cement Withoutnot,,cantahdi labelitnt, dealer in your neighborhood. Write for our Free tocti5age book "What The Farmer Can .Do With Concrete" -No farmer can afford to be without a espy. Canada Cement Company Limited Montreal .1 • 0'41,